25-09-2012, 11:25 PM
is this a sign of bubble?
CIMB Research, Sept 24
EXCESS liquidity is ebbing away. Domestic banking unit loan-to-deposit ratio has crept up to 92 per cent. S$-deposit growth year to date is a sluggish 3.2 per cent versus loan growth of 9 per cent. UOB has been bleeding deposits for over three quarters now and DBS lost 9.5 per cent of its S$-fixed deposits in Q2 2012. Previously unfazed by deposit competition, DBS recently raised time deposit rates to match peers.
No doubt, the local banks still hold the lion's share of S$-deposits but competition from large foreign banks is chipping away the deposit franchises.
An extensive branch and ATM network used to be the key to attracting deposits. In a world of increasing digital banking transactions and sustained low interest rates, branches have lost their value. Instead, attractive rates and customised lifestyle benefits are the new battleground for deposits.
CIMB Research, Sept 24
EXCESS liquidity is ebbing away. Domestic banking unit loan-to-deposit ratio has crept up to 92 per cent. S$-deposit growth year to date is a sluggish 3.2 per cent versus loan growth of 9 per cent. UOB has been bleeding deposits for over three quarters now and DBS lost 9.5 per cent of its S$-fixed deposits in Q2 2012. Previously unfazed by deposit competition, DBS recently raised time deposit rates to match peers.
No doubt, the local banks still hold the lion's share of S$-deposits but competition from large foreign banks is chipping away the deposit franchises.
An extensive branch and ATM network used to be the key to attracting deposits. In a world of increasing digital banking transactions and sustained low interest rates, branches have lost their value. Instead, attractive rates and customised lifestyle benefits are the new battleground for deposits.